N Schreiber & Sons 10" Hand Forged Carbon Steel Slicer ~1950's

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Drop forged and then hand forged (tapered tang, lots of taper in blade thickness) hand ground (and hand ground again) N Schreiber & Sons slicer from approximately the 1950's (or early 60's) judging from the forged tapered tang and 1/2 pin and disc rivets but with the generally post war curved bolster transition into inside of handle. A very sturdy and capable feeling knife. 

N Schreiber & Sons forged knives are always great quality, they often seem to be on the robust side of thickness and this slicer is right in line with that, it has been thinned a bit and re-surfaced but in keeping with their style of grinding.

Hand forged and ground carbon steel knives like this largely ended in the mid 1960's in Solingen Germany being supplanted first by the removal of hand forging after drop forging and later by stainless steel and less hand grinding. As the older skilled workers retired and the cost of labor rose hand grinding on carbon steel was no longer the norm in Solingen. Stainless steel became very popular and the bigger names in Solingen began to produce larger quantities of knives with less hand work in the 1970's onward. This knife represents a previous era where hand work was a pillar of Solingen production. 

While it's certainly not the last of it's kind and forged carbon steel is still done in Solingen, this knife represents the last of the era of carbon steel and hand grinding as a mainstay of produciton. Look for the shape of the bolsters (narrow and tapering) and well as the slight curve on the face of the blade. 

This knife has been re-ground and thinned behind the edge on a large 3 foot diameter Japanese water stone wheel (kaiten mizu toishi) and then resurfaced with a medium fine finish, our take on an old style grinding and finishing technique. While the particular wheel used to refurbish this knife is typically used in Japanese knife making it is very similar to the old grinding wheels used to shape European and American hand ground cutlery. A convex face to a blade greatly increases a knife's performance as there is less sticking as there is on a flat face and the blade does not get thick behind the edge nearly as fast as with a flat faced blade. Being that we are often working with old blades that need re-shaping and might have been rusted expect some minor imperfections, we try to give a fresh start to our re-ground blades with an eye towards their original grind style and keeping as much metal is needed on a blade when ever possible. Check out Bernal Cutlery co founder Josh Donald's book Sharp to see these wheels in use and more about their history in Europe and Japan. 

Steel Type: Carbon steel
Handle Material: Wood
Weight: 6.92 oz
Total Length: 15"
Blade Length: 10"
Blade Height: 1.5"

N Schreiber & Sons 10"...

Regular Price
$300.29
Sale Price
$300.29
Regular Price
Sold Out
Unit Price
per